17 August 20XX
My
Dear Lucilius:
Our
traffic has dwindled to almost nothing in the two weeks or so since
my last shopping trip – in the past week, I have maybe seen six
cars drive along the road that passes in front of my house.
Our
little town, that had virtually no business in it, has almost none
now. The RV park/bar is still open, but with no fuel and dwindling
alcohol supplies there is little enough left to attract folk. Most
of the RVs have left by now in search of fuel in towns farther away
and I suspect the few remaining will follow – I have been counting
them as I make my daily stroll around town to get out and stretch my
legs. The campground I did my laundry at is still open as well,
although even his supplies are dwindling as well.
Our
post office/gas station has essentially become the post office and
nothing else – the RVs leaving took the last of the fuel and it is
unknown when, or even if, a replacement delivery will be made. The
town gathers once a week now for mail delivery every Wednesday to
parcel out the packages and letters that have been stored up
(interestingly, junk mail still seems to make its way through. Good
for kindling if nothing else).
By
the end of the month, if not sooner, I suspect commerce will have
completely died out here if nothing else changes.
The
InterWeb suggests that the towns north and south of us still have
supplies and are in business, but I suspect that everyone is holding
out because of the risk of having no additional fuel – a round trip
is not less than 50 miles to the nearest town of size and the need
has to be balanced against the risk of wasting the fuel. I have been
constructing a list of things that I think I will need to secure on
one last trip; I keep trying to decide when I have reached the
maximum amount of benefit of the trip versus the risk that things
will start becoming depleted.
The
quiet is amazing.
Without the traffic, the surrounding hills and even the town are almost dead quiet. One can hear the occasional shouts of children or the barking of dogs, or even the sound of cattle farther out. But really nothing else – human voices are kept low or inside and if people are playing music or the news, I surely cannot hear it.
I
have lived through the time that men touched the stars; it seems that
I will now live through the time that men scarcely hear or know their
neighbors.
Your Obedient Servant, Seneca
interested to see what may follow
ReplyDeletewhere are his kids?
Thanks Deb!
ReplyDeleteHis kids, so far as he has written (or at least he has told me), seemed to have drifted away in something not to similar to some of the other "break-ups" I know of personally due to political of social beliefs. It is not that people actively hate each other, it is just they find they do not like to spend time with people they vehemently disagree with and so, degree by degree, just disappear from each other's lives.